Political Roundup: Labour’s motel housing shame

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The Labour Government has now spent over $1.2bn on housing people in motels and emergency facilities. This is an indictment on a government that refuses to build enough state houses for vulnerable people who are the biggest victims of the housing crisis. But what’s more, the staggering $1m spent each day on emergency housing has also been a social disaster, the scale of which is becoming too apparent for the Government to ignore.

The scandal of the $1.2bn emergency housing programme has become most visible in Rotorua, where the homelessness problem is particularly acute, and the rorts of substandard motel accommodation are stark. TVNZ’s Sunday programme just released an excellent 30-minute programme on their investigation into how this scandal is playing out in Rotorua.

This is quite rightly turning into the biggest political story of the week. Today the National Party and Te Pati Māori are united in calling for an independent inquiry into the debacle. The answer has to lie in building up greater state capacity for dealing with those at the bottom – a solution that the Labour and Green parties in government seem strangely allergic to.

The motel emergency housing rort

The Government’s policy of dealing with those faring worst in the housing crisis has been to use the private sector to provide accommodation. In lieu of building enough new state houses, Labour has adopted the policy of the last National Government and simply pushed the homeless into motels.

This policy had some strong logic when Covid struck. Up until then the problem of homelessness had been a growing social crisis, but with the pandemic it was a potential health crisis that might spread the virus, so the Government decided to make use of all the empty motels and other private accommodation that was no longer required in lockdown. Moving rough sleepers into motels on a large scale was the celebrated as a significant achievement.

But what was meant to be a temporary solution – a band-aid at most – was then leaned on by Labour as an almost-permanent way to deal with the crisis. Labour wasn’t willing to develop any other solutions for the most vulnerable, and so has left those in motels to rot. For example, in Gisborne, one family of six have recently been revealed to have been kept in a one-bedroom motel for four years.

Emergency housing has become “big business”

The policy of paying the private sector to house poor people has been a gigantic boon for motel owners and the like. It’s rightly been labelled as a “get-rich-quick scheme” for those contracting to the Ministry of Social Development (MSD), which pays the bill. One motel company has so far received $60m in emergency housing payments.

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The Government is generally paying well above market rates for the motels and rentals it uses. Broadcaster Rachel Smalley explains: “Over the years, MSD has paid private landlords to rent their properties – in private lettings, these properties would be rented for $1400 a month. When the government arrived with its cheque book, the landlords would ask for $2900 and get it. The rent would more than double.”

This was confirmed in June by an investigation by the Herald’s Isaac Davison, who found “Private rentals which were getting $1400 a week in income were rented to MSD for $3900 a week.” In fact, the Auditor-General made a call late last year for MSD to clean up its act, as it wasn’t apparent that the public was getting value for money on the emergency housing contracts.

What is particularly problematic is the quality of the emergency housing. Many of the motels being used could be euphemistically described as “budget”. Many are unmaintained dumps that would otherwise have been due to be bulldozed or condemned.

The Rotorua rort

TVNZ’s Sunday documentary exposed how the Government is now paying for about 50 different motel companies in one area of Rotorua to house the homeless and vulnerable. What used to be called the “Motel Mile” in the tourist city, along Fenton St, is now known as “MSD Mile”.

The documentary shows the exploitation and grim living conditions of the vulnerable people who are shifting into the motels. One particular organisation, “Visions of a Helping Hand”, which has received about $14 million in funding is alleged to have treated its clients extremely poorly. Not only does the organisation contract for accommodation but, using its own security firm, it also polices the clients.

Kristin Hall, the journalist who made the documentary, explains: “It’s alleged Visions staff have kicked women and children out of motels and transitional homes, including a woman who was in labour at the time. Another woman says her children were so scared of Tigers Express Security guards, she bought a car to sleep in with her children instead. It’s also alleged Tigers Express Security guards have been involved in sexual relations with vulnerable tenants, taken drugs on the job and that patched gang members have worked security shifts for the company.”

National’s spokesperson Chris Bishop has described the TVNZ expose as highlighting the “appalling scenes of intimidation, violence, misery and crime” going on in Rotorua.

Leftwing political commentator John Minto has responded to the scandal, saying “TVNZ has reported what can only be described as a scandal of epic proportions. The sheer scale of the social and economic disaster Labour has created for low-come tenants and families across Aotearoa has to be lived to be believed.”

Minto argues it’s simply a case that “All the government’s chickens have come home to roost in Fenton Street, Rotorua”, and he points to Labour’s failure on the housing crisis, and in particular its failure to build more state houses. He poses the question: “why have Labour MPs not demanded the resignation of the hapless Housing Minister Megan Woods?

It turns out that Woods has known about the Rotorua situation for many months. But in an apparent buck-passing manuover has relied on accounts from the Police and lawyers who effectively tell her not to worry.

Jacinda Ardern has now also been forced to respond to the scandal, and essentially said that using motels is better than having families sleep in vehicles. Perhaps missing the point on purpose, Ardern fails to consider that there are other options. What’s more, she ignored the fact that under her government the number of children sleeping in cars has been calculated to have increased about 350 per cent.

Proper housing solutions are needed

Many of the vulnerable people needing emergency housing have lots of needs that aren’t being dealt with by simply pushing them into dirty motels. As Rachel Smalley explains, “in order to support people to improve their situation, they need a home. They need stability. Their children need to go to the same school. They need to establish long-term friendships. They need a fixed address before they can get employment.”

The problem is that the Government doesn’t have any sort of effective wrap-around support service for those it places in emergency housing. Instead, the Government wants others to do the heavy lifting, and contracts out so much of this to so-called charities and the private sector. In the Rotorua expose we get a sense of how this private sector system is working out.

This is the sort of thing that Kāinga Ora could be providing, if mandated and resourced. After all, this is the government’s own housing delivery agency, which already has expertise in managing emergency housing.

The problem for the Labour Government is that this would be expensive. And Labour doesn’t want to take risks. It’s had five years to come up with solutions, but it can’t even put an end date on when it wants to stop using motels as emergency housing.

In terms of the necessary cost, housing researcher Alan Johnson says that the Government should be using the billions of dollars that it plans to keep paying to private businesses to actually invest in its own emergency housing. He says: “It apparently has never occurred to the government that it could just go out and build these houses. Such short-sightedness borders on an ideological blindness with an unwillingness by Labour’s leadership to truly appreciate the extent of the role the state must play in order to address the housing crisis.”

Similarly, broadcaster Duncan Garner says the money just has to be found: “New Zealanders had every right to be hopeful Labour might finally change the game and use the Government’s significant balance sheet and ability around procurement to genuinely build a proper and vast network of emergency and transitional houses.”

A failure of state housing

Labour inherited a state housing wait list of about 5000 families, but now its edging ever closer to 30,000. In fact, the Government is actually demolishing lots of state houses, and in some places selling off the land to the private sector. For example, it has been reported recently that while 193 houses have been built so far this year, 202 houses have been demolished since January.

The OECD points out that the New Zealand Government spends relatively little on state housing. Looked at proportionally, state houses comprise only 3.6 per cent of total housing stock (down from 5.4 per cent of houses in 1990).

So although the Government is building more state houses than recent Labour and National governments, the numbers are still insignificant. Some have calculated that if Labour was going to build state housing on the same population ratio as the First Labour Government of Michael Joseph Savage, they would need to be constructing about 10,000 a year.

A shameful outcome for a Labour Government

Jacinda Ardern came to power in 2017 on the back of the housing crisis, rightly pointing to the National Government’s abysmal handling of this problem. She pledged that ending homelessness was a priority for her government. But brushing it under the carpet is not the same as fixing the problem.

Ardern will tell us that she is still aspirational about fixing homelessness, and will bristle at any notion that she hasn’t done enough. But it’s obvious to most people that she has simply put the problem in the “too hard basket”, unwilling to grapple with what it would take to genuinely deal with an urgent problem.

There are other politicians in power who also need to account for their failure. Does anyone still have confidence in Megan Woods as Housing Minister? Or Marama Davidson as Homelessness Minister? And, what about Social Development Minister Carmel Sepuloni?

Before being elected, Labour’s then-Housing spokesperson Phil Twyford got plenty of hits on National for its policy of using motels for the homeless. He complained that spending $90,000 a day was proof of a government that had failed. But now his government is spending about ten times that much. And the number of motels on MSD’s books has apparently gone from 200 to 1200.

No wonder the Salvation Army says that the National Government’s “housing crisis” has morphed under Labour into a “housing catastrophe”.

Further reading on Housing

Kristin Hall (1News): Nats, Te Pāti Māori want Rotorua emergency housing investigated
1News: Rotorua emergency housing ‘feasting on dysfunction’ – Waititi
John Minto (Daily Blog): All the government’s chickens have come home to roost in Fenton Street, Rotorua

Rotorua Daily Post: Ardern in complete denial about housing failure in Rotorua – National
1News: Rotorua emergency housing crisis ‘devastating’ – councillor
Benn Bathgate (Stuff): Bishop’s broadside over Rotorua motels and govt’s ‘utter failure’ on housing
RNZ: Rawiri Waititi calls for inquiry into emergency housing
Georgina Campbell (Herald): Rotorua’s MSD mile and councils’ housing failure

Emma Houpt (Herald): Rotorua’s emergency housing for homeless sparks calls for urgent investigation
1News: MP calls for investigation into Rotorua emergency housing
Brent Melville (BusinessDesk): Ranked: New Zealand’s biggest home builders(paywalled)

Other items of interest and importance today

GOVERNMENT AND PARLIAMENT
Tim Murphy (Newsroom): ‘They all lied, except for Jami-Lee’
Amy Williams (RNZ): Political donations trial draws to a close in High Court in Auckland
Jenée Tibshraeny (Herald): KiwiSaver fee tax U-turn: Government didn’t consult with individual fund managers on GST change (paywalled)
Ireland Hendry-Tennent (Newshub): PM Jacinda Ardern concedes Government should have been more transparent over scrapped KiwiSaver tax changes
Duncan Garner (NBR): Is this the law that buries Labour? (paywalled)
Tova O’Brien (Today FM): Wowee the government and opposition were busy while I was away
Don Brash: Confiscation of water infrastructure should by itself get Govt thrown from office in 2023
Richard Harman: National making little headway against Labour (paywalled)
Isobel Ewing (Newshub): Government accused of failing to follow conservation law with stewardship land review
Newshub: Curbing online extremism key focus for Jacinda Ardern at UN General Assembly – expert
David Farrar: Roy Morgan poll August 2022
The Facts: Government confidence at new record low

HEALTH
Imogen Wells (Newshub): Thousands of people each month leaving emergency departments before being treated
Michael Morrah (Newshub): Investigation finds black market tobacco being sold online out of homes to avoid taxation
Brendon McMahon (Local Democracy reporting): People ‘are going to die’ — Westport hospital desperation, source claims
Ian Powell (BusinessDesk): Who will be our voice for healthcare? (paywalled)
Rachel Thomas (Stuff): Pharmac promises equity boost in first official response to independent review

LOCAL GOVERNMENT AND ELECTIONS
Jem Traylen (BusinessDesk): Local election candidates star in NZTA ads (paywalled)
Heather du Plessis-Allan (Newstalk): I was going to vote for Paul Eagle in the Wellington Mayoral race, but I don’t want to reward a liar
Tina Law (Stuff): Council is ‘letting down’ voters by failing to properly promote local elections, expert says

Stephen Forbes (Local Democracy Reporting): Candidate promotion by licensing trust ill-advised, not illegal – electoral officer
Maree Mahony (RNZ): Local body elections: Boosting the youth vote and a councillor’s baptism of fire
Tim Dower (Newstalk): How much damage can so-called ‘extremists’ cause in Local Body Elections?
Torika Tokalau (Stuff): Pacific people urged to ‘make their vote count’ in local elections amid low turnout

ECONOMY, EMPLOYMENT AND INEQUALITY
Morgan Godfery (Guardian): Brutal lockout in New Zealand mill town a stark portrait of capitalism’s failed hopes and broken promises
Susan Edmunds (Stuff): Want a comfy retirement? Better save $755,000
Tamsyn Parker (Herald): Retirement savings gap: Pre-retirees urged to save more due to inflation (paywalled)
Susan Edmunds (Stuff): ‘Taxation by stealth’: Inflation means tax brackets need ‘urgent attention’
Henry Frear and Professor Craig Elliffe (Herald): The power of confusion – Tax policy and the need for informed debate (paywalled)

COVID
ODT Editorial: Unmasking the mask plan
Damien Venuto (Herald): Michael Baker on what should follow the Covid-19 traffic light framework
Bridie Witton (Stuff): Will the Government do away with NZ’s traffic light framework?

Jo Moir (Newsroom): Covid rules on chopping block in post-winter review

JUSTICE AND LAW AND ORDER
RNZ: Government accused of ‘pandering to the polls’ in latest gang offensive
Ireland Hendry-Tennent (Newshub): PM Jacinda Ardern denies Labour is favoured by gangs after Head Hunters member urges followers not to vote for National
Adam Pearse (Herald): Auckland youth crime wave: New Govt package launched in response
Karanama Ruru (Stuff): More ‘wraparound support’ for children caught doing ramraids in Auckland, govt announces
RNZ: Government package extends education, employment programmes to more at-risk youth

OTHER
Chris Trotter (Interest): Sounds of silence
Reweti Kohere (Spinoff): The Quarter million
Thomas Manch (Stuff): Neo-Nazi group Action Zealandia ‘unfit, ill-disciplined’, undercover researcher finds

Jacques Steenkamp (BusinessDesk): NZ whistleblower’s long battle for UNDP justice(paywalled)

5 COMMENTS

  1. Labour’s housing catastrophe is completely unacceptable yet they do nothing and it becomes worse every day.Rotorua in the meantime is no longer a tourist attraction unless you are fascinated by its ghetto like look.
    Is anyone going to do anything or is this the new New Zealand?
    I’m ashamed this is happening.

  2. Speaking of ghettos many State housing blocks of flats were ghetto like Bob and they were knocked down by the National Party and replaced with 800k apartments and sold off privately. I know cause my daughter and I lived in one of those ghettos.

    • I was a contractor that fixed the homes up for sale. Most times the for sale signs went up before we had finished working on it.

    • in the UK many tower blocks have been converted into private flats, nothing wrong with the actual buildings that security and maintenance hasn’t fixed they were turned into ‘sink estates’ and managed decline for a reason.
      the tower block that I lived in as a student is now one of the most expensive apartment blocks in liverpool.

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